I'm a full instructor under Guro Dan Inosanto and Sifu Paul Vunak myself in JKD/Kali... and am currently a LEO firearm and DTAC instructor, Hubud is my go to drill for training everyone! Civilian and non-civilian!
I like Hubud, but why the checking hand, it seems you could eliminate this extra and make a 1, 2, 3. Similar to a simple pak da drill, I understand in Arnis, kali, Escrima, that addition hand movemt is for stripping the weapon, correct me if I am wrong, could you not simply by pass the extra hand movement? Techinically in that session he made contact with one arm 3 times. in my experience a simple pak da drill would eliminate making contact with that hand 2 times, let me know your thoughts.
Erik Paulson is my last dream and bucket list instructor to train with. The man is a legend and one of the first men to focus on bridging all the gaps. Straight legend
Sensitivity drills are soooo fun to play. It’s the play when we grow. Lions teach play and all predatory animals teach play knowing that it is a skill to survive. I love sensitivity drills!
The kali hand style, I learned back in the days use to be all about hitting the arms presure points (inside of the arm presure points). In turn shutting down his arm movements all together, in seconds.
How I do miss this stuff... Thanks for the demo. Hubad is almost the hidden bridge between systems I believe. It can flow into boxing, Muay Thai techniques, arm drags and throws, grab and push defenses, and obviously weapons. As another commented, all martial artists should learn it and it's variations.
I hope to go to this gym one day. True Boxers stance have improve my game years ago and I still apply it. I'm now finding the mixture of other martial arts is also options .
@@cswfullertonIf this is you Erik I have watched you for many years and Dan.I watched footage of you training with Dan and I watched you as Stelio on Bloodsport 3 and I hope to meet you and Dan one day in heaven which might be soon the way things are going with war.You are like Gene Lebell and Dan a living encyclopedia of Martial Arts.
Who said it doesn't work?! It's a drill that trains your tactile sensitivity, pressure and power momentum alongside your reflexes and reactions time. It's a good tool to condition and strengthen your arms. It works with different weapons and ranges. Try it and apply it. Everything works and everything doesn't work you are the common denominator. If you suck you suck and even a firearm couldn't save you....
Not a master by any means, but I do teach very basic FMA. Yes, Kali/Escrima/Arnis start with weapons (usually the progression of stick, knife, then empty hand). Anything you do with a stick (substitute for a larger bladed weapon), you can do with a knife (smaller pointy sharp object), with small adjustments. Anything you can do with a knife, you can do empty handed, with small adjustments. The empty hand stuff is based on the armed stuff. Stick work- basic body mechanics, movement, dual weapon training, and how it fits together. Knife work- more precision, closer range, fine tuning. Empty hand- learning how to use everything you have learned to this point, without a weapon (panantukan, demog, sinawali boxing, etc.).
Every martial artist should learn this drill as it really compliments any fighting system. It's adaptable to knife and stick attacks too.Great work.
you are very right.
Doing drills like this really became transferable for things like hand fighting and guard manipulation in grappling and mma
I'm a full instructor under Guro Dan Inosanto and Sifu Paul Vunak myself in JKD/Kali... and am currently a LEO firearm and DTAC instructor, Hubud is my go to drill for training everyone! Civilian and non-civilian!
I like Hubud, but why the checking hand, it seems you could eliminate this extra and make a 1, 2, 3. Similar to a simple pak da drill, I understand in Arnis, kali, Escrima, that addition hand movemt is for stripping the weapon, correct me if I am wrong, could you not simply by pass the extra hand movement? Techinically in that session he made contact with one arm 3 times. in my experience a simple pak da drill would eliminate making contact with that hand 2 times, let me know your thoughts.
Brilliant training and great energy between student and instructor
Erik Paulson is my last dream and bucket list instructor to train with.
The man is a legend and one of the first men to focus on bridging all the gaps.
Straight legend
Sensitivity drills are soooo fun to play. It’s the play when we grow. Lions teach play and all predatory animals teach play knowing that it is a skill to survive. I love sensitivity drills!
HEY ! IT'S GOOD TO SEE(SIFU , E.P. ) BACK TO HIS (JKD-KAIL) ROOTS !!!
The kali hand style, I learned back in the days use to be all about hitting the arms presure points (inside of the arm presure points). In turn shutting down his arm movements all together, in seconds.
I remember these drills with my teacher GREAT TIMES!!!!!!
my favorite drill kuya.
Yeeeeea
How I do miss this stuff... Thanks for the demo. Hubad is almost the hidden bridge between systems I believe. It can flow into boxing, Muay Thai techniques, arm drags and throws, grab and push defenses, and obviously weapons. As another commented, all martial artists should learn it and it's variations.
I hope to go to this gym one day. True Boxers stance have improve my game years ago and I still apply it. I'm now finding the mixture of other martial arts is also options .
Very nice stuff! 👍
perfect
Love it.
💯💯💯
Well I'll be damned, a Kail Grand Master. (Yes, that's what skilled practitioners of Kai are called, kuya.)
Fantastic❤❤❤❤
Very good Guru! Thanks! 😁😈
I love this stuff Thank you for Posting 💪❤️🙏
No way 1 for 1 and 2 for 2 etc are secrets 👆😎❤️
Just like Jason Bourne 🎥
Thank you!!
@@cswfullertonIf this is you Erik I have watched you for many years and Dan.I watched footage of you training with Dan and I watched you as Stelio on Bloodsport 3 and I hope to meet you and Dan one day in heaven which might be soon the way things are going with war.You are like Gene Lebell and Dan a living encyclopedia of Martial Arts.
I guess I'm kind of confused. You're a legend, and for good reasons. Why are you teaching this old stuff that doesn't work so well?
Who said it doesn't work?! It's a drill that trains your tactile sensitivity, pressure and power momentum alongside your reflexes and reactions time. It's a good tool to condition and strengthen your arms. It works with different weapons and ranges. Try it and apply it. Everything works and everything doesn't work you are the common denominator. If you suck you suck and even a firearm couldn't save you....
It works. They are just drills. You guys are just caught up with what you see now. Don’t let your egos get to you
@@w.flores8868 Hm. dunno. all respect to paulson.
Reads... "Fullerton @_@" I work here every day.. time to buy some lessons haha
Do you think hubud and wingchun is related?
This seems like a complicated pak and jut sao combined in wing tsun system so it seems pretty usable. I wonder if it applies to stick or knife work.
Not expert but I think this whole martial arts is originated from swords. then adapted to sticks knifes and barehanded afterwards.
Not a master by any means, but I do teach very basic FMA. Yes, Kali/Escrima/Arnis start with weapons (usually the progression of stick, knife, then empty hand). Anything you do with a stick (substitute for a larger bladed weapon), you can do with a knife (smaller pointy sharp object), with small adjustments. Anything you can do with a knife, you can do empty handed, with small adjustments. The empty hand stuff is based on the armed stuff. Stick work- basic body mechanics, movement, dual weapon training, and how it fits together. Knife work- more precision, closer range, fine tuning. Empty hand- learning how to use everything you have learned to this point, without a weapon (panantukan, demog, sinawali boxing, etc.).
So it’s basically wax on and wax off.